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The Hunger Project - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hunger Project

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hunger Project
Type 501(c)(3) non-profit
Founded 1977
Headquarters Manhattan, NY, USA
Key people Joan Holmes, President, CEO
John Coonrod, COO
Werner Erhard, Founder
Robert W. Fuller, Founder
John Denver, Founder
Fitigu Tadesse, Vice President Africa
Badiul Alam Majumdar, Vice President Bangladesh
Peter Bourne, Chair BOD
Charles Deull, Secretary, Director
Joaquim Chissano, Director
V. Mohini Giri, Director
Specioza Wandira Kazibwe, Director
Cecilia Loría Saviñón, Director
George Mathew, Director
Queen Noor of Jordan, Director
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, Director
Amartya Sen, Director
Steven J. Sherwood, Director
George Weiss, Director
Industry charitable organization
Revenue 0.27% to $8,727,193 million USD (2004)
Operating income 30.4% to $919,249 USD (2004)
Employees 118 employees
Website Corporate Homepage

The Hunger Project (THP) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable organization incorporated in the state of California.[1] The Hunger Project describes itself as committed to the sustainable end of world hunger. In thirteen countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America, the organization implements programs that mobilize rural grassroots communities to achieve sustainable progress in health, education, nutrition and family income. [citation needed] The Hunger Project has received recognition for its innovations in gender and development. [citation needed] Since its inception, it has also received criticism and is still controversial (see Public criticism below).

Contents

[edit] Current activities

[edit] Primary activities

In Africa (in Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique, Senegal and Uganda) The Hunger Project carries out what it calls its "epicenter" strategy. The Project organizes clusters of 10 to 15 villages to establish and manage their own programs for rural banking, improved agriculture, food-processing, income-generation, adult functional literacy, food-security, and primary health-care (including the prevention of HIV/AIDS). A committee of villagers (with equal representation of women and men) manages each epicenter facility. A special program of microfinance, the African Woman Food Farmer Initiative, integrates with the epicenter strategy. [citation needed]

In 14 states of India, working in partnership with 90 local civil-society organizations, The Hunger Project focuses on the role of women elected to local village councils. It has trained 45,000 elected women as change-agents for solving problems of education, health and nutrition in their villages. It provides women with training in social and political citizenry, local governance and village-level planning, and provides them with links to existing government programs. The hunger project organizes women into federations in order to strengthen their ability to lobby for change. [citation needed]

In 450 clusters of villages spread over all 64 districts of Bangladesh, The Hunger Project has trained more than 60,000 village volunteer "animators" to strengthen the institutions of local democracy and to carry out campaigns to improve food-production, incomes, sanitation, nutrition and public health. [citation needed]

In Latin America, where poverty especially affects rural indigenous communities, The Hunger Project works with such communities to overcome their economic marginalization - particularly that of the indigenous women. The Hunger Project implements programs in indigenous communities of Bolivia, Peru and Mexico. [citation needed]

[edit] Financial and accountability reports

The Hunger Project raises funds, via contributions, in the following countries Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States. Approximately 70% of contributions are from the United States and the remaining 30% are from the remaining nine affiliated countries[citation needed].

According to its online report retrieved September 2006, Charity Navigator reports that The Hunger Project's program costs in FY2004 were 76.6% of expenses, and administrative and fundraising costs were 23.4%. [2] Give.org/BBB reports that as of February 2006, the Project's program expenses were 77% of total, and administrative and fundraising costs 23%.[1] Charity Navigator gives The Hunger Project three out of four stars, and the American Institute of Philanthropy gives it an A- rating. [3]

The Hunger Project met the standards to be listed on the 2004 Combined Federal Campaign National List [4] and the Commonwealth of Virginia 2005 Charity Application.[5]

Give.org reported that The Hunger Project met 18 of its Standards for Charity Accountability, but failed to meet one standard. [1] The Better Business Bureau (New York) also reported failure to meet one of its standards. [6] The standards not met dealt with frequency of Board meetings and Board oversight of the CEO.

[edit] History

[edit] Origins

The folksinger John Denver; Oberlin President Robert W. Fuller; and Werner Erhard, founder of Erhard Seminars Training (est), founded The Hunger Project in 1977 in close association with R. Buckminster Fuller, the environmentalist Dr. Donella Meadows, and the land-reform expert Professor Roy Prosterman. [citation needed] Joan Holmes, previously associated with Erhard Seminars Training as "consulting educational psychologist", has served as the CEO of the Hunger Project from its inception. Holmes had previously managed an independent study which later led to the book A look at est in education, written by Robert W. Fuller and Zara Wallace, January 1, 1975, est, an educational corporation.

[edit] Evolution of programs


In 1977, the United States National Academy of Sciences World Food and Nutrition study identified the lack of "political will" to end hunger as an important factor in the field. Based on this conclusion, The Hunger Project launched programs of education and advocacy designed to mobilize a global constituency committed to the end of hunger. [citation needed]

In 1979, as the world initially failed to respond to a growing famine in Cambodia, The Hunger Project participated in generating a White House conference on the crisis [citation needed] and then carried out campaigns to raise funds for relief organizations. A similar campaign occurred for the Somalia famine of 1980. [citation needed] These conferences and campaigns revealed that hunger-response agencies lacked sufficient cooperation and coordination, and the Hunger Project launched a series of initiatives which contributed to the founding of InterAction in 1984. [citation needed]

As famine swept across Africa in 1983-84, The Hunger Project met with Africans across the continent to gain a clearer understanding of the root causes of the crisis, concluding that the famine fundamentally represented a failure of leadership and a failure of policy. The Hunger Project launched initiatives in both these areas, as well as a research initiative to discover ways it might make a difference on the ground in developing countries. [citation needed]

During this exploration, members of its board felt the lack of a comprehensive, global strategic plan; however in 1989 the board came to see top-down planning not as the solution but as part of the problem. Beginning in 1990, The Hunger Project redirected all its efforts to pioneering decentralized, multi-sectoral bottom-up approaches to development – starting in India. [citation needed] By 1995 the Project had commenced activities in 10 states of India, 20 districts of Bangladesh, Senegal and Ghana. [citation needed]

In 1996, Unicef published a study, the Asian Enigma, demonstrating that entrenched gender-inequality not only functioned as a major factor in hunger and poverty — as The Hunger Project had long emphasized [citation needed] — but actually served as the primary root cause for South Asia’s high rates of child-malnutrition. [citation needed] This led to the creation of new interventions designed to overcome gender-inequality in each developing region. These include the African Woman Food Farmer Initiative, the Panchayati Raj Campaign, the AIDS and Gender Inequality Campaign and National Girl Child Day and new strategies for the empowerment of indigenous women’s leadership in Latin America. [citation needed]

[edit] Public criticism

Since its inception, there has been criticism of The Hunger Project by the public and the press. This criticism has mainly focused on:

  • the organization's original ties to Werner Erhard, Erhard Seminars Training, and their philosophies;
  • the focus of the Project (1977-1990) on public education and advocacy, rather than providing food and other direct action; [7] (On May 30, 1981 the board of directors of Oxfam Canada passed a resolution which stated they would not endorse any activities or programs sponsored by The Hunger Project, nor would they accept funds from the project.[8])
  • recent activity of The Hunger Project to remove criticial articles from the Internet.[9]

[edit] Project reaction against criticism

The Hunger Project has responded to articles it considers false and defamatory by sending letters threatening legal action, and in some instances undertaking legal proceedings, resulting, in some cases, in apologies, correction and payment of damages.

Mother Jones, the The Christian Century, the fifth estate, Carol Giambalvo, Rick Ross, and Jim Provenzano have all received complaints from The Hunger Project for publishing articles that The Hunger Project considered to be false and defamatory.

...the Hunger Project has reacted strongly against other reporters who have attempted to cover the group's activities. Pat Lynch, then an NBC News reporter, stated that the Hunger Project carried out a four-month campaign to discredit her while she was preparing what eventually became an NBC Evening News segment in 1980. And when Dan Noyes was asked by a radio station in 1983 to participate in a program with a Hunger Project spokesperson, the organization refused to appear. Instead they requested a tape of the program with Noyes alone for review by the group's lawyer.[10]

[edit] Timeline: media, commentator criticism

The timeline below shows some of these media articles, and The Hunger Project's responses. For a summary, see "The Hunger Project: A Historical Background, A News Summary".[11] a report compiled from public media sources. Events related to The Hunger Project's efforts to remove critical articles from the Internet are also included in the timeline.

[edit] Governance & administration

[edit] Executive staff

[citation needed]

  • Joan Holmes, President; previously consulting educational psychologist, Erhard Seminars Training.
  • John Coonrod, Vice President and COO
  • Fitigu Tadesse, Vice President for Africa
  • Badiul Alam Majumdar, Vice President and head of Bangladesh programs

[edit] Board membership

[edit] See also

[edit] Individuals

[edit] Organizations/Concepts

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c "Global Hunger Project". Give.org/BBB. February 2006. Retrieved September 17, 2006.
  2. ^ "The Hunger Project". Charity Navigator. Financial data FY2004. Retrieved September 17, 2006.
  3. ^ "Top Rated Charities". American Institute of Philanthropy. Retrieved September 17, 2006.
  4. ^ "2004 Combined Federal Campaign National List" (Word document, see "Global Hunger Project", item #1436). U. S. Office of Personnel Management. Retrieved September 16, 2006.
  5. ^ "CVC 2005 Charity Application Global Hunger Project". Commonwealth of Virginia Campaign. Retrieved September 17, 2006
  6. ^ "Charity Report The Hunger Project". Better Business Bureau (NY). Retrieved September 17, 2006
  7. ^ a b The Hunger Project Refutes Innuendos, May 2006, The Hunger Project, website, http://www.thp.org/overview/responses/
  8. ^ a b Bell, Daniel and Weston, Brendan (February 13, 1985). "Hunger Project feeds itself". McGill Daily
  9. ^ a b c d Ross, Rick (April 9, 2004). "The Hunger Project attempts to purge criticism and history from the Internet". Rick Ross Institute. Retrieved September 2, 2006.
  10. ^ Weir, David; Noyes, Dan; and Center for Investigative Reporting (1983). Raising Hell: How the Center for Investigative Reporting Gets the Story., pp.156., Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. ISBN 0201108585.
  11. ^ a b Ross, Rick (April 8, 2004). "The Hunger Project: A Historical Background, A News Summary", Retrieved August 26, 2006
  12. ^ Shah, Diane K. and Reese, Michael (August 28, 1978). "Food for thought". Newsweek. Vol. 92, No. 9, p. 78.
  13. ^ Gordon, Suzanne (December 1978). "Let them eat est". Mother Jones. Vol. 3, No. 10, pp. 40-44, 49-50, 52-54
  14. ^ Hoekema, Dr. David (May 2, 1979). "You can't eat words. Christian Century. 96, pp. 486-7. Retrieved August 25, 2006
  15. ^ Hoekema, Dr. David (December 26, 1979). "The Hunger Project and EST: close ties". Christian Century. 96, pp. 1293-4. Retrieved August 26, 2006
  16. ^ Garvey, Kevin (April 19, 1980). "Hunger Project: Erhard's est laboratory". Our Town
  17. ^ Keerdoja, Eileen; Lord, Mary; and Abramson, Pamela (June 15, 1981). "The Hunger Project feeds its coffers". Newsweek. Vol. 97, No. 24, pp. 18, 21.
  18. ^ Gordon, Suzanne (April 17, 1983). "Feeding on Narcissism in the name of the world's hungry". Los Angeles Times. pg. F5.
  19. ^ Tanner, John (June 1985). "Hungry for converts", New Internationalist. 148. Retrieved August 26, 2006
  20. ^ Behar, Richard and King, Jr., Ralph (November 18, 1985). "Fuzzy, but fervent", sidebar to article "The Winds of Werner". Forbes. 136, p. 44. Retrieved August 27, 2006
  21. ^ "Hyping Hunger" (October 23, 1986). the fifth estate, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 17 mins., 52 secs.
  22. ^ Kelly, Caitlin (February 20, 1987). "The Hunger Project involves no food, just a taste of 'commitment' ". The Gazette (Montreal). p. A1
  23. ^ Redden, Bill (November 19, 1987). "The dumb EST plan to end hunger". Willamette Week. Vol. 14, No. 4, p. 4.
  24. ^ a b Giambalvo, Carol (January, 1988). "The Hunger Project: Inside out". Spiritual Counterfeits Project (SCP) Journal. Vol. 8, No. 1. Retrieved August 26, 2006.
  25. ^ Provenzano, Jim (June 3, 1999). "Wheels of Fortune, Part Seven: Devotion Over Dollars". Bay Area Reporter. Vol. 29, No. 22, Pp. 1, 12, 13, 23. Retrieved August 26, 2006
  26. ^ Cline, Austin (April 19, 2004). "The Hunger Project: going after critics". About.com. Retrieved August 26, 2006
  27. ^ Hunger Project, The (June 2006). "Rebuttal to the notion that The Hunger Project attempts to purge criticism and history from the internet". The Hunger Project website. Retrieved September 2, 2006.
  28. ^ Provenzano, Jim (June 3, 1999). "Wheels of Fortune, Part Seven: Devotion Over Dollars". Bay Area Reporter. Vol. 29, No. 22, Pp. 1, 12, 13, 23. Retrieved August 26, 2006
  29. ^ "Global Board of Directors", The Hunger Project website, updated February 2006, accessed September 11, 2006

[edit] External links

[edit] Corporate websites

[edit] Financial information

[edit] Other

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